Legal or not, gambling is big business in India

From IOL

IOL BRS GAMMAM

Like many visitors to the Casino Royale Goa on a rainy Saturday night on India’s western coast, Salim Budhwani said that he did not gamble but also had no objection to the betting at the busy tables downstairs.

Despite socially conservative India’s ambivalence about gambling, consultancy firm KPMG estimated that $60 billion (R601.2bn) was wagered in the country in 2010. Much of the gambling is illegal, but attitudes are slowly changing as more Asian countries embrace gaming as a revenue generator and tourist draw.

Legal gambling in the increasingly wealthy country of 1.2 billion is limited to state lotteries, horse races and a handful of casinos. Most gambling in India, from penny-stake games at street corners and card parties in affluent homes to wagers on cricket and underground numbers games, is illicit and goes untaxed.

“People are playing on the roadside everywhere. People are playing in their houses,” said Budhwani, 33, a luggage retailer from the city of Hyderabad who had brought his family to Goa, a tourist destination and one of two Indian states with casinos.

“People are educated, they know what’s at stake.”

Gambling on cricket, India’s most popular sport, draws hundreds of millions of dollars.

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